Dowd v. . Faucett

15 N.C. 92 | N.C. | 1833

The plaintiff by articles of agreement executed by himself and the defendant, demised to the defendant for one year certain lands, and the defendant covenanted to build a new mill house on the premises during the term, but failed entirely to perform his covenant, and after the expiration of the term refused to surrender the possession, and the plaintiff brought an action of ejectment against him, which was pending and undetermined, at the trial of this suit. The defendant offered to show in mitigation of damages, that since the expiration of the lease, and while he was holding adversely to the plaintiff, he had erected the mill; but the presiding judge rejected the evidence, and from the judgment in the court below the defendant appealed. Although the action of covenant sounds in damages, yet they are not (93) arbitrary and altogether in the discretion of the jury, as in cases of vindictive actions in tort. There is a rule which may be given, and a measure for the damages in the stipulations of the parties, and the value of the thing to be done by the covenantor, and which is not done by him, or so much of it as remains undone. It may be stated, too, as certain, that evidence of a set off, or of any claim in the nature of a set off, is not applicable to this action; because it would render the proceedings too complex, and the administration of justice between the parties too uncertain. Damages may be reduced by such things as have been done in execution or towards the performance of the covenant; but not by a matter distinct from it or altogether unauthorized by it. Here for instance, the covenant is to build a mill; the defendant could not show that he built a barn on the plaintiff's land, either as performance or part performance. The covenant is also to build the mill by a particular day; what the defendant did towards it before that day, might be an answer to the damages pro tanto. But the case states that nothing was done before the day, and the whole remained to be performed. When specific articles are to be delivered on a day certain, and are not delivered, the debtor cannot discharge himself by a subsequent tender, or diminish the damages by a subsequent fall in the price. The covenantee has a right to the value at the day, and to receive that value in money. So, this plaintiff was entitled by his contract to recover in money the value of the houses not then erected. Can the defendant compel him, against his will, to take work, or by his act, alter in *77 any manner the plaintiff's rights, without his concurrence? He may have changed his mind, and did not choose then to build a mill; or at all events, he chose that the defendant should not do the work. The plaintiff had then a right to the possession of the land; but the defendant refused to surrender it, and held over, and has since erected the mill. If the time had been extended by agreement, and Dowd had received the mill, it would have been an answer to the action, as a (94) satisfaction. But not so, when it is against his consent, even in mitigation of damages, more than other work done on the land, which was not mentioned in the contract and which the plaintiff forbade. Both are equally without the sanction of an agreement. If the defendant could recover in his own action for such work, his demand could not be set off in this; and if not set off, strictly speaking, evidence ought not to be received which would virtually give it that character. But the defendant could not maintain assumpsit for work done on the plaintiff's land, not only without, but against his request. If so, I am at a loss for a legal ground, which is to prevent the plaintiff now from recovering all to which he was at any time entitled. It is said, his estate is improved, and therefore he receives the benefit. But one man has no right to improve another out of his estate or out of his debts. I should think, therefore, that the evidence was properly rejected, had the plaintiff already got into possession of the land, including the mill. But here the defendant is still holding over and defending an ejectment; and clearly it is not competent for him to ask compensation now, for work which the plaintiff has never accepted, nor been allowed to accept, out of the enjoyment of which he is kept by the defendant, and which may be destroyed before the plaintiff will be let into possession.

The counsel for the defendant cited Wilson v. Forbes, 13 N.C. 30. It is not applicable. There the plaintiff did not choose to treat his title derived from the covenantor as null, until by virtue of that very deed it became valid. The covenant was annexed to the principal contract, the conveyance; and as the latter was made available, so that the plaintiff kept the land, he ought not also to recover the whole purchase money. All that took place there, was under and in conformity to the deed. As to actions by an executor against an executorde son tort, where the latter had paid debts, or by a disseisee against a disseisor, who had paid rents in chief, in which those payments were allowed in mitigation of damages, they are (95) actions of trespass or trover, and all idea of a contract is out of the question; and there can be no possibility of doing *78 wrong to the plaintiffs by the deductions, because they are discharged from debts, for which they were bound at all events. But if by such allowances, the rightful executor would suffer loss, as by being deprived of his retainer, nobody would think of giving the wrongful executor this benefit of his payments, however innocently he might have made them. Similar to those cases will be the rights of the parties, when the present plaintiff shall bring his action for mesne profits. The jury can then make fair allowances out of the rents, and to their extent, for permanent improvements honestly made by the defendant, and actually enjoyed by the plaintiff, taking into consideration all the circumstances.

PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed.

Cited: Lindsay v. King, 23 N.C. 403; Merritt v. Scott, 81 N.C. 389;Scott v. Battle, 85 N.C. 194; Brown v. Davis, 109 N.C. 28.

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